Friday 9 March 2012

Latest wind farm research is a load of hot air




We turn, once again, to Australia to learn more about what is going on in own back yard.  The Society for Wind Vigilance claims that their research into complaints from people near wind farms has undergone peer review.  For example, here's a quote from Carmen Krogh to the Canadian Senate:

Carmen Krogh, Member of the Board, The Society for Wind Vigilance: Thank you. I have been conducting research on this subject for about three years and I have had a couple of articles published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. I did some research on the sociological impacts because, not only were people experiencing a variety of symptom, but the social impacts were significant as well. I concluded in one of my articles that if we do not site wind turbines properly, people will suffer adverse health effects. 

Source: THE STANDING SENATE COMMITTEE ON ENERGY, THE ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES 
OTTAWA, Tuesday, October 18, 2011 

This is Senate Evidence, and it's been peer reviewed.  So it must be good science - right?

Wrong.  

Simon Chapman, Professor of Public Health at the University of Sydney, keeps an eye open for statements like these.

Professor Chapman, according to Wikipedia,  " has authored 17 books and major reports, 281 papers and 150 letters and commentaries in peer reviewed journals.  Chapman is a regular writer on public healthmatters in leading Australian newspapers, having written over 200 opinion page and journalistic articles since 1981.  His main research interests are in tobacco control, media discourses on health and illness, and risk communication."
Here's what he wrote about the Society's claims:

Crikey.com
October 14, 2011
Simon Chapman

Yesterday I wrote about the connections between some of the principal individuals who have been vocal in opposing wind farm development in Australia.
The various organisations at the forefront of the opposition recently published eight papers in a special edition of an allegedly peer-reviewed journal that you could be excused from never having heard of. The Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society is a journal that has appeared erratically over the past few years. It was indexed between 1981-1995 by the Web of Science, the international scientific indexing platform that “covers over 10,000 of the highest impact journals worldwide, including Open Access journals and over 110,000 conference proceedings”.
But after 1995 it was dropped from the list of journals being indexed, generally a sign that indexing services regard a journal as having fallen below an acceptable scientific standard.
In the 14 years it was indexed, a citation search conduced on October 10, 2011 showed that it published 961 papers that had been cited for a grand total of just 345 timesan average of 0.36 per paperalmost a homeopathic strength citation rate. Today, Web of Science shows it has published only seven papers that have been cited seven or more times, with the most-cited paper in its history having been cited just 15 times. PubMed, the indexing service of the US National Library of Medicine also does not index the journal.
Nonetheless, anti-wind farm websites have jubilantly described the journal as a “leading scientific peer-reviewed journal” and the issue as “groundbreaking”. In summary, this is a journal that cannot be described as low ranking in scientific research publishing. It is more accurately described as “unranking”.
All the papers in the issue are only accessible by pay-per-view, but to give an idea of the quality, here’s an example: Krogh CME. Industrial wind turbine development and loss of social justice. Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 2011;31(4):321-333.
This paper contains no “methods” section, so it fails to conform to the most basic requirement of scientific reporting: that it contains details of how the research reported was undertaken. This is a fundamental requirement because without it, readers have no way of assessing the adequacy and rigor of any investigation, and whether any results report and conclusions drawn are justified or not. Instead, the authora retired pharmacist who PubMedshows published one paper in 1985explains that she “began investigating reports of adverse health effects made by individuals living in the environs” of wind turbines in Ontario, Canada  for “more than two years”. That’s it. And this is called peer reviewed “research”.
Instead of describing any research, the author has written a paper that mixes up statements somehow apparently made to her by de-identified informants about negative effects of exposure to turbines with similar examples from other parts of the world, from websites and submission to inquiries by wind farm opponents.  We are told nothing about the process by which her informants were interviewed, the questions they were asked, how they were selected and whether her “study” was approved by any institutional research ethics committee. This is not a paper that would be make first base as an example of serious scientific investigation about wind farms and health.
Its findings contain not a single example of any informant reporting anything but adverse effects of exposure to wind farms, when it is widely acknowledged that a large majority of those so exposed report no adverse effects nor complain about the turbines and even (make the sign of the cross …) like them.
In an attempt to understand the process of peer review that had been followed, in August 2011, I wrote to the editor of the Bulletin, asking the following questions:
  1. Were you approached by those participating in [a 2010 anti-wind farm meeting held in Ontario] to publish these papers? Or did the initiative come from you?
  2. Did you personally edit this issue or were guest editors used? If so, can you please describe how they were selected?
  3. Was there a charge made to the authors to publish their papers together like this?
  4. It is plain that all the papers are openly negative about wind farms, which is curious given that there is a large body of research that demonstrates a very different picture. Did you put out a call for submissions or approach researchers working in this area to submit manuscripts?
  5. Did you approach any authors who did not have affiliations with the anti-wind farm movement?
  6. Were all the papers peer reviewed?
  7. Did the authors propose their own reviewers and were these the reviewers used?
  8. Can signed or de-indentified copies of these reviews be made available to others on request?
Over several testy email replies, the editor made the following comments:
“A third party mediated between the organizers of the symposium and myself. We are dealing with a very difficult situation in which there is no balanced approach to begin with. Deep pockets have controlled the research agenda and professional people with impeccable credentials did what they did in this case out of there (sic) own pocket. As far as refereeing is concerned, never has any issue been so over refereed by people with impeccable credentials in anticipation of the kinds of concerns you voice.
“I can assure you that this Bulletin is not a front for any special interest group and that I would not have dreamt of publishing this issue had it not been for the questionable conduct of the windfarm industry and government officials. The issue attempts to create a little bit of balance, and show that there are legitimate other voices coming from people with impeccable credentials who are not funded because of their views.”
No copies of reviews or reviewers names were provided. A researcher from the University of Adelaide has subsequently written directly to the authors and received no reviews back. The principle of open peer reviewing is widely discussed in research publishing and while requests by others to see reviews are unusual, refusal to be transparent can only promote suspicion about the process, particularly when the quality of the papers is considered.


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Since this edition was published in August 2011, the Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society has not published a full edition.   It did publish a few online articles but even those stopped in December 2011.   It normally published six times per year, so it has missed a least three editions.

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